Peckinpah's first film as a director, "The Deadly Companions" (1961), plus "Ride the High Country" (1962), "Major Dundee" (1965), "The Wild Bunch" (1969) and "Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid" (1973) form an arc in the stylistic span of outlaw mythology; among other accomplishments, they raised to the level of perverse sacrament the male gesture of mutual respect that supersedes fear of death. His "semi-westerns," "The Ballad of Cable Hogue" (1970) and the director's personal favorite, the lovely and atypically gentle "Junior Bonner" (1972), extended his theme of the demise of a noble way of life in the face of a modern world. "The Getaway" (1972) and "Convoy" (1978) put contemporary anti-heroes ahead of as well as outside the law.
Perhaps his most controversial film was "Straw Dogs" (1971); the inevitable brutality of its protagonist, ostensibly a man of reason, offers a metaphor on the ancient bent of the human psyche vis-a-vis personal territory and blood rites. "Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia" (1974), reputedly autobiographical, was a psychodrama refracted through a tequila haze, a saga of a loner/artiste who reaps the grotesque wages of sin on a desperate trek of atonement. Peckinpah's distrust of policymakers was reflected in "The Killer Elite" (1975) and his last film, "The Osterman Weekend," (1983), both essays on vicious tactics and dissolute friendship in the CIA. "Cross of Iron" (1977), Peckinpah's largest production, is a fiercely edited view of World War II slaughter where the Wehrmacht wear the patented scars of his honorable killers.
Few directors have had more conflict with studio heads and producers than Peckinpah. Feuds over the content and final cuts of "Major Dundee" (after which Peckinpah was blacklisted for three years), "The Wild Bunch" and "Pat Garrett" are the stuff of Hollywood legend. Critical response to his work has often been as violent as the films themselves, with Peckinpah frequently berated for demeaning women and excessively glorifying male exploits. On an aesthetic level, Peckinpah is celebrated for his slow motion furies, first employed in a 1963 entry of TV's "Dick Powell Theater" called "The Losers," exercised to startling effect in "The Wild Bunch", but somewhat overused in subsequent work. "Cathartic violence" was a term that seemed coined to define his iconoclastic postures. In Peckinpah's Conradian scheme that mixes nobility with tragedy, all are guilty to some degree and all have their reasons. His work typically exists on a skewed moral plane between eras and cultures, with ambiguous quests for identity and redemption undertaken by hopelessly lost outcasts and enemies. He vividly defines the thin line between internal conflict and external action, and, perhaps most importantly, the violent displacement of a false code of honor (and law itself) by another more enduring and devout.
As thorny as his relationships with producers and executives were, Peckinpah could inspire extraordinary loyalty among actors and technicians. An ensemble of notable Peckinpah players would include David Warner, Warren Oates, L.Q. Jones, Strother Martin, James Coburn, Kris Kristofferson and Ben Johnson. Peckinpah also enjoyed repeated and fruitful collaborations with cinematographers Lucien Ballard and John Coquillon and composer Jerry Fielding.